Title

Authors

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

6-2018

Abstract

Plagioclase feldspars are common on the surfaces of planetary objects in the Solar System such as the Moon and Mars, and in meteorites. Understanding their response to shock deformation is important for interpretations of data from remote sensing, returned samples, and naturally shocked samples from impact craters. We used optical petrography, micro-Raman, and micro-FTIR spectroscopy to systematically document vibrational spectral differences related to structural changes in experimentally shocked (0-56 GPa) albite-, andesine-, and bytownite-rich rocks as a function of pressure and composition. Across all techniques, the specific composition of feldspars was confirmed to affect shock deformation, where more Ca-rich feldspars transform to an amorphous phase at lower shock conditions than more Na-rich feldspars. Onset of amorphization occurs at ~50 GPa for albite, between 28 and 30 GPa for andesine, and between 25 and 27 GPa for bytownite. Complete amorphization occurred at pressures greater than ~55 GPa for albite, ~47 GPa for andesine, and ~38 GPa for bytownite. Petrographically, these experimentally shocked samples do not exhibit the planar microstructures common in naturally shocked plagioclase, despite showing the expected trends of internal disordering and deformation as seen in the micro-Raman and infrared 24 spectra. Average spectra of hyperspectral images of these samples mimic macro-scale measurements acquired previously. However, we see micro scale heterogeneity in the shock response, resulting from either variations in composition, crystal orientation, or the inherent heterogeneity of the shock wave topology. This is an important factor to consider when deducing shock pressures in naturally shocked samples.